LAST WEEK we posted how YATSENYUK got GRABBED by the CROTCH and CARRIED AWAY. I JUST SAW A ARTICLE SAYING HE PROMISED TO RESIGN in 2014 and HE DIDN’T resign. This week THIS GUY GETS DECKED. Madrid: Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy. GOOD LORD!
Balls & Brawls: Big fight in Ukraine parliament after opposition MP goes for PM Yatsenyuk’s crotch
MPs of the Verkhovna Rada in Kiev launched a brawl during a speech by Ukraine’s Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk. The PM later said there were “a lot of morons,” so he would not comment on the incident – READ MORE http://on.rt.com/6z8e
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‘Thief!’ ‘Bastard!’ Highest level brawl at Ukraine govt session
Mikhail Saakashvili, the ex-Georgian president who is now governor of Odessa, got a glass of water thrown in his face by Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov as an angry slanging match over who is more corrupt spilled over into violence.
READ MORE: http://on.rt.com/6zi5
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Watch: Teen punches Spanish Prime Minister in face, arrested
Mass fight in the Japanese parliament
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8lJAIYTLxCI
Fighting among the members of parliament are not uncommon, but in Japan it is a rare phenomenon. Serious brawl occurred in the local parliament, when the vote was passed a new draft of amendments according to which the Japanese troops will be able to take part in operations abroad, by the way, for the first time since the end of World War II. This bill is actively promoting the entire ruling coalition led by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, however, the opposition and the population is opposed. At the time of the voting members of the opposition attacked the head of the defense committee, trying to disrupt the vote, they began to drag them supporters of the new bill. In the brawl involved, even women, and all event televised. At the same time the walls of the Parliament in Tokyo held a rally with a demand not to interfere in conflicts abroad.
Japanese politicians brawl in parliament over bill to allow troops to fight abroad
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59LysAEZfAo
MPs push and shove each other during a heated debate as 13,000 rally outside Tokyo’s parliament against proposed change to law
Japanese politicians scuffled on Thursday during a heated debate over a security bill that could see the military fight abroad for the first time in decades, after thousands rallied to voice their anger.
New generation of Japanese anti-war protesters challenge Abe
Read more
In scenes uncommon for Japan’s normally sedate parliament, members of the opposition and the ruling coalition pushed and shoved each other as a committee chairman was surrounded.
Tensions fan high after the committee vote was repeatedly delayed over Wednesday night, as opposition MPs blocked doorways and packed the corridors of parliament in protest.
Thirteen people were also reportedly arrested during the evening for “interfering with officers” during a rally of an estimated 13,000 people outside parliament in Tokyo.
Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets to vent their anger during almost daily rallies over the past weeks, a show of public feeling on a scale rarely seen in Japan.
Under the planned changes, the military – known as the self-defence forces – would have the option of going into battle to protect allies such as the United States even if there was no direct threat to Japan or its people.
Although the constitution, which bars troops from taking part in combat except in pure self-defence, was imposed by US occupiers, many Japanese feel strongly a change in the law would alter the country’s pacifist character.
The bills are scheduled to be sent to a plenary session of the upper house after being voted on by the committee, potentially seeing them become law this week.
The prime minister, Shinzo Abe, is keen to get the bills passed before a three-day holiday next week.
The proposed legislation sailed through the lower house – where Abe’s coalition has a two-thirds majority – in July.
Parliamentary rules say if the upper chamber does not pass the bills within 60 days, they can be returned to the lower house and voted into law.
Abe is reportedly ready to take this step, despite the risk of further angering an already hostile public.
There are growing signs the bills have taken a toll on Abe’s once high popularity. Opinion polls show most voters oppose them.
Many legal scholars have said the changes are unconstitutional, and critics worry they would drag Japan into US wars in far-flung parts of the globe.
Abe and his supporters say the bills are necessary to deal with a changing security environment marked by an increasingly assertive China and unpredictable North Korea.
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